[CentOS] automounter with users home directories on centos 7.
Jason Welsh
jason.welsh at mercurygate.com
Thu Sep 10 17:10:09 UTC 2015
[root at server2 home]# mount server1:/home/jason /home/jason
[root at server2 home]#
[root at server2 home]# ls /home/jason/
Desktop Documents Downloads Music mylogfile.txt Pictures Public
Templates Videos
[root at server2 home]# df -h /home/jason/
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
server1:/home/jason 297M 19M 278M 7% /home/jason
[root at server2 home]#
so it works manually, just not with the automounter.
Jason
On 09/09/2015 05:35 PM, James A. Peltier wrote:
> ----- Original Message -----
> | Not tried automount with Centos 7 nor with selinux.
> |
> | With that said autofs relies on nfs mounting to work, so have you
> | started there by attempting to manually mount /home?
> |
> | Another place to look is at the hostname. I've had problems where auto
> | mount doesn't like the short name and insists on using a FQDN, to get
> | around that you could try using the IP address rather than the hostname.
> |
> | On 09/09/15 16:31, Jason Welsh wrote:
> | > showmount -e
> |
> | --
> | If money can fix it, it's not a problem.
> | -- Click and Clack the Tappet brothers
>
> /home is a directory by default on all GNU/Linux hosts. If you plan to use it as a mount point then you need to remove the directory and then start autofs otherwise there will be a conflict.
More information about the CentOS
mailing list